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s
Stanford Announces Tuition Increase to $ 1000
By SHARA PAVLOW
Aaaoclate Editor
A $350 raise in annual tuition costs
will be instigated in September, 1970, UM
President Dr. Henry King Stanford revealed to a gathering of student leaders
early this month.
The increase will up full-time undergraduate, law, and medical tuition to $1,-
000 a semester, a (175 hike over the present figure of $825.
Graduate tuition will be raised from $60
to $73 per credit.
A 29 per cent rise in costs over the past
two years has necessitated this increase,
Stanford explained to the students gathered to discuss plans and programs for the
comming year.
"Modern education runs a race with
obsolescence," he wrote in a letter explain
ing the increase to parents. "To keep pace.
no University can ever stop refining the
excellence of its academic performance.
This demands superior teachers, sophisticated equipment, additional instructional
facilities. . .all increasingly costly."
The realities of economics have made
this decision necessary, he explained.
Rising costs of living, higher wages, and
the fact that UMis a private university not
run by the state were a few examples Stanford cited upon which the Board of Trustees based their decision.
"We are not a state university and can
no longer afford to compete with their
prices," the President went on.
"In effect, only 53.2 per cent of the cost
for educating a student is covered by tuition
payments," he commented.
The University head then revealed a list
of some 75 private colleges and universities
all with tuition charges exceeding those of
L'Mfor 1968-69.
In his letter advising of the intended
change, Stanford expressed concern on
behalf of the Board of Trustees for such
a necessity.
"I am sure you will agree that our principal concern must be that our students receive the quality of education you and they
expect us to provide," he wrote.
Tuition for the year ending May 31,
1969 brought In an approximate nineteen
and a half million dollars out of a total
income of slightly over 44 million dollars.
In other words, tuition provided roughly
44 per cent of the University's Educational
income (figures for this past year are not
yet available).
Estimated income from tuition for 1969-
70 is $24,200,000. These figures are based
on an estibated student population of 10,-
000,
Scholarships, as in past years, Dr. Stanford revealed, will increase proportionally
to the raise in tuition.
According to the President, many more
scholarships are greatly needed to maintain balance and proportion within the
student body.
"I am not eager to see UM become an
institution with only students from the upper income brackets," he emphasized.
Along with the announcement, Dr. Staiv
ford placed great emphasis on the many
other fund raising projects of this University.
"For a private institution such as ourx.
it is necessary and quitecommon to heavily
depend on contributions madeby thealum
ni, he went on.
Because we are such a young school
and because the alumni are relatively
young (90 per cent graduated after 1950),
the University of Miami Alumni Association has not had as aggressive a policy as
has been needed, he said.
According to figures from Carl W. Fien,
Associate Director of Alumni Relations,
some 33,000,000 alumni contributed a
total of $519,000 this past year.
USG President Jim Yasser was not
available for comment on the increase.
One of Yasser's campaign pledges last
spring was the abolishment of periodic
tuition increments.
VOL. 45 No. 4
FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1969
SPECIAL MAILAWAY EDITION
Students stroll past Ashe Administration Building on way to Student Union for break between classes.
Fund-Raising Ejforts Produce
Historic High Of $30 Million
An historic high in the
number of dollars has been
raised during the past fiscal
year.
Fund raising efforts at
UM produced a record total
of $29,638,794 in gifts,
grants and pledges for fiscal
1968-69. During the same reporting period in 1967-68,
a total of $18,289,180 was
received.
More than $17 million
was committed to the University's 10 year, $93 million Golden Anniversary Development Program, bringing that total to $47,878,-
176.
Hailing the fund-raising
achievement as evidence of
the dramatic advance made
in recent years by the University toward academic and
financial maturity, President
Stanford praised the efforts
of "our many dedicated volunteers and loyal supporters
in the professional and busi-
Halloran Resigns Post
To Become Director
Of Pi Kappa Alpha
Patrick W. Halloran, Assistant Dean of Men for the
past four years, resigned this
week to take a position as
executive director of Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity's national office in Memphis,
Tenn.
"I am leaving to seek additional responsibilities and
to further my professional
goals." Halloran said. "It
Halloran
was a difficult decision to
leave the University. I found
UM to be an exciting and a
valuable experience personally."
Halloran, who was a field
secretary for the fraternity
in 1965, was chosen for the
position by PIKA's Supreme
Council about July 4.
Salary information was
not available.
As executive director,
Halloran will be supervising
a headquarter's staff of 25
and developing programs
ior the 147 chapters ol the
fraternity.
A member of the national
office said "Halloran has
been active as an alumnus,
as a national officer and has
maintained a great interest in
the fraternity. For this
reason, the supreme council
thought him emmlnently
qualified for the position."
"He is certainly going to
be missed by the students and
staff of the university," said
Dean of Students William
Butler. "He has done a
tremendous job in fraternity
affairs. Since he has been
here, the program has improved greatly both socially and academically and has
moved In a positive direction
financially."
"He has been an excellent
advisor and we are sorry
to loose him," said Tim
Meany, lnterfraternity president.
ness communities who have
joined with us to develop
one of the nation's finest centers of private higher education at the University of Miami."
Charles R. Estill, vice
president for development affairs, said the total of almost
$30 million was "an outstanding one, which places
the University of Miami
among the national leaders
in Institutional fund-raising.
On the way to achieving
the record total, the University received the largest
single gift in its history —
$12,226,250 from the Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel
Foundation of New York
City.
The financial breakdown
for fiscal 1968-69 is as follows: Rosenstiel gift, $12,-
226,250; cash, gifts and
grants, $11,418,279; pledge
balance on gifts to the Golden Anniversary Development Program, $609,453;
bequest expectancies, $4,-
525,500; and trusts executed, $859,312.
Private sources accounted
for $23,680,965 of the $29,-
638,794, while $5,957,829
was received in non-research
government grants.
Tips For Registration
1. Get a copy of the class
schedule as soon as you arrive on campus. (Available
at the Registration and
Scheduling Office, Room S-
124, Memorial Classroom
Building.)
2. Study the class schedule
and try to work out a \
Uratnary time schedule, using
dlffr
fore you go to the
for registration.
turself ol
U. a O., Scheduling Help-
Service (Students who are
specially trained to assist you
with scheduling problems).
They will be available from
4 to 7 p.m. in the lower
nge of the student Union
Sunday. Sep** <tnd
.•elope pro-
vld only registration
n this envelope,
so that not lose or
y thing.
Equality Seen Solution
To UM Parking Problem
More equality is the key
result being stressed in what
appears to be an initial solution to the much haggled
and long argued-over parking problem.
Recommendations made
to President Stanford by a
specially appointed Committee on Parking have suggested a reshuffling of parking places, construction of
almost 500 new spaces and
reduction of vehicle classification to three major categories.
The Committee, created
in response to a letter from
USG President Jim Yasser
explaining USG's official position on the situation, also
advocated that employee
parking be shifted to outlying districts of campus, possibly with tram service from
the district lots to central
University locations.
The employees however,
objected to the decision based
on a lack of representation
in original committee meetings.
Therefore, a re-evaluation was made of the recommendations and at the suggestion of President Stanford, a temporary compromise was offered.
It was decided that E
spaces would be left, alone
for the time being. r\» new
facilities near the physical
plant are completed and as
each business office is moved
to a new location, relevant
employee parking spaces
will be gradually switched
to students.
After consideration, re-
evaluation, and compromise, the following recommendations made by the
committee and based on the
suggestions of USG will be
initiated this fall:
o Distribution of FA, S
and E spaces be established
in approximate percentages
of 72% students, 14% faculty,
and 14% employees;
(Tills will give students a
total of 4,070 parking
places; faculty, 790 slots;
and employees 790 slots.)
o Construction of302 additional spaces;
o Redesign certain lots
for 150 more spaces;
o Elimination of all
minor classifications leaving
only FA, S, D, and E categories;
• Faculty, administration and students pay the
same registration fee which
will remain at $5 for 1969-
'70;
(It was suggested that the
University would eventually
absorb the cost of Faculty
and administration decals
by an increase In salary.)
• New fine system be
adopted with no automatic
increases. . .$1 for illegally
parking in classified spaces,
$3 for illegally parking in D
or contract spaces, driveways, and loading zones,
and $10 for lack of parking
decal;
o Equal enforcement to
be established;
e All unpaid fines prior
to July 1 will be cancelled.
In addition to recommendations made by the Parking
Commission, three more avenues have been opened in the
University's attempts to alleviate the parking situation
on campus.
They are actions instigated long before the special
parking Committee was
established, butonly recently
come to light in terms of
reality.
The legal debateoverthe Lincoln property adjacent to
Mahoney-Pearson Halls has
been settled in favor of UM.
Local residents have until
Aug. 23, to file for an appeal.
In terms of parking, this
will raise thenumber of parking slots by at least 500
spaces. Funding for a high
rise facility is expected to be
completed fairly soon, announced UM President
Henry King Stanford.
Eugen Cohen, Vice President for Financial Affairs
has made arrangement for
the loan.
1* The restructuring of Parking Authority Commission
(PAC), has been completed
and will include one non-
voging chairman appointed
by the University President, three students appointed by USG President
and ratified by a majority
vote of USG Council (one
of these three will serve as
vice chairman of the committee), one employee appointed by the University
President, the Director of
Security, and one representative from the Faculty
Senate.
One University Engineer
is to serve as an Ex Officio
non-voting member.
"Part of the problem In
the past can be related to
the vocal but actionless behavior of the committee members," explained USG President Jim Yasser of his proposals.
"The 3-3-1 votingcompo-
s it ion will result in a committee less unwelldy and disparate as this year's."
He went on, "It is Important that the Committee
be able to avoid Presidential
concern and an overabundance of Ad Hoc Committees."
Curfew Change
Effective Sept.
Liberation has hit UM.
Partially, at least. In the
form of curfew revisions for
upperclass coeds.
Beginning officially in
September sophomore,
junior, and senior women
will have no curfews.
Previously, sophomore
girls had to return by mid-
New Policy
On Attendance
Given Approval
By MURRAY COHEN
of th* Hurrican* ataff
The Faculty Senate, In
a special summer session,
voted final approval of the
new voluntary attendance
policy. The policy was initiated last year by USG as
part of its "Day of Conscience" protest. The new
voluntary policy will go Into
effect In September.
The original recomenda-
tion of the committee called
for the following to appear
in the Bulletin.
"The University considers regular and punctual
attendance an Important
aspect of the learning process, but has a voluntary attendance policy in most
courses, except at announced
quizzes and examinations.
In these courses the instructor may not cause a student's
grade to be lowered, or in
any way penalize a student
for class absences."
The Faculty Senate
added specific types of
courses that would be exempted by the policy. They
include: science or language
labs and applied music
courses in which all or
a substantial part of course
work is based upon classroom participation.
"Despite the rewording"
Dr. Eugene FHpse, director
of the Health Center and a
member of the original committee, said "I personally do
not believe that a single instructor will be permitted to
designate required attendance unless he is the only
professor teaching that particular course."
"The committee report
established a policy that was
intended to protect students
from the few capricious instructors. It puts the reins
in the hands of the students."
night on week nights and
2 a.m. weekends. Junior and
senior coeds could stay out
until 2 a.m. any night.
Freshmen curfews move
up one hour to midnight on
week nights and remain at
2 a.m. Friday and Saturday. The coeds will continue
to be eligible for permission
for 10 additional 2 a.m. privileges a semester without
parental permission and five
overnights each term if
parents sign in advance.
Freshman women are the
only ones required to sign-
in for the evening and sign-
out overnight. A girl indicates by her signature N
her evening sign-in cardthut
she is in her residence hall
for the evening. If she does
not leave the hall, she may
sign the card early in ihe
evening. If she docs leave
the hail, she must sign in
immediately upon her return.
Women who sign in and
then leave the hall are subject to disciplinary action.
No student may sign another
student in at any time.
Photo by J*ff Orloff
UM campus offers many places for contemplation.

s
Stanford Announces Tuition Increase to $ 1000
By SHARA PAVLOW
Aaaoclate Editor
A $350 raise in annual tuition costs
will be instigated in September, 1970, UM
President Dr. Henry King Stanford revealed to a gathering of student leaders
early this month.
The increase will up full-time undergraduate, law, and medical tuition to $1,-
000 a semester, a (175 hike over the present figure of $825.
Graduate tuition will be raised from $60
to $73 per credit.
A 29 per cent rise in costs over the past
two years has necessitated this increase,
Stanford explained to the students gathered to discuss plans and programs for the
comming year.
"Modern education runs a race with
obsolescence," he wrote in a letter explain
ing the increase to parents. "To keep pace.
no University can ever stop refining the
excellence of its academic performance.
This demands superior teachers, sophisticated equipment, additional instructional
facilities. . .all increasingly costly."
The realities of economics have made
this decision necessary, he explained.
Rising costs of living, higher wages, and
the fact that UMis a private university not
run by the state were a few examples Stanford cited upon which the Board of Trustees based their decision.
"We are not a state university and can
no longer afford to compete with their
prices," the President went on.
"In effect, only 53.2 per cent of the cost
for educating a student is covered by tuition
payments," he commented.
The University head then revealed a list
of some 75 private colleges and universities
all with tuition charges exceeding those of
L'Mfor 1968-69.
In his letter advising of the intended
change, Stanford expressed concern on
behalf of the Board of Trustees for such
a necessity.
"I am sure you will agree that our principal concern must be that our students receive the quality of education you and they
expect us to provide," he wrote.
Tuition for the year ending May 31,
1969 brought In an approximate nineteen
and a half million dollars out of a total
income of slightly over 44 million dollars.
In other words, tuition provided roughly
44 per cent of the University's Educational
income (figures for this past year are not
yet available).
Estimated income from tuition for 1969-
70 is $24,200,000. These figures are based
on an estibated student population of 10,-
000,
Scholarships, as in past years, Dr. Stanford revealed, will increase proportionally
to the raise in tuition.
According to the President, many more
scholarships are greatly needed to maintain balance and proportion within the
student body.
"I am not eager to see UM become an
institution with only students from the upper income brackets," he emphasized.
Along with the announcement, Dr. Staiv
ford placed great emphasis on the many
other fund raising projects of this University.
"For a private institution such as ourx.
it is necessary and quitecommon to heavily
depend on contributions madeby thealum
ni, he went on.
Because we are such a young school
and because the alumni are relatively
young (90 per cent graduated after 1950),
the University of Miami Alumni Association has not had as aggressive a policy as
has been needed, he said.
According to figures from Carl W. Fien,
Associate Director of Alumni Relations,
some 33,000,000 alumni contributed a
total of $519,000 this past year.
USG President Jim Yasser was not
available for comment on the increase.
One of Yasser's campaign pledges last
spring was the abolishment of periodic
tuition increments.
VOL. 45 No. 4
FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1969
SPECIAL MAILAWAY EDITION
Students stroll past Ashe Administration Building on way to Student Union for break between classes.
Fund-Raising Ejforts Produce
Historic High Of $30 Million
An historic high in the
number of dollars has been
raised during the past fiscal
year.
Fund raising efforts at
UM produced a record total
of $29,638,794 in gifts,
grants and pledges for fiscal
1968-69. During the same reporting period in 1967-68,
a total of $18,289,180 was
received.
More than $17 million
was committed to the University's 10 year, $93 million Golden Anniversary Development Program, bringing that total to $47,878,-
176.
Hailing the fund-raising
achievement as evidence of
the dramatic advance made
in recent years by the University toward academic and
financial maturity, President
Stanford praised the efforts
of "our many dedicated volunteers and loyal supporters
in the professional and busi-
Halloran Resigns Post
To Become Director
Of Pi Kappa Alpha
Patrick W. Halloran, Assistant Dean of Men for the
past four years, resigned this
week to take a position as
executive director of Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity's national office in Memphis,
Tenn.
"I am leaving to seek additional responsibilities and
to further my professional
goals." Halloran said. "It
Halloran
was a difficult decision to
leave the University. I found
UM to be an exciting and a
valuable experience personally."
Halloran, who was a field
secretary for the fraternity
in 1965, was chosen for the
position by PIKA's Supreme
Council about July 4.
Salary information was
not available.
As executive director,
Halloran will be supervising
a headquarter's staff of 25
and developing programs
ior the 147 chapters ol the
fraternity.
A member of the national
office said "Halloran has
been active as an alumnus,
as a national officer and has
maintained a great interest in
the fraternity. For this
reason, the supreme council
thought him emmlnently
qualified for the position."
"He is certainly going to
be missed by the students and
staff of the university," said
Dean of Students William
Butler. "He has done a
tremendous job in fraternity
affairs. Since he has been
here, the program has improved greatly both socially and academically and has
moved In a positive direction
financially."
"He has been an excellent
advisor and we are sorry
to loose him," said Tim
Meany, lnterfraternity president.
ness communities who have
joined with us to develop
one of the nation's finest centers of private higher education at the University of Miami."
Charles R. Estill, vice
president for development affairs, said the total of almost
$30 million was "an outstanding one, which places
the University of Miami
among the national leaders
in Institutional fund-raising.
On the way to achieving
the record total, the University received the largest
single gift in its history —
$12,226,250 from the Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel
Foundation of New York
City.
The financial breakdown
for fiscal 1968-69 is as follows: Rosenstiel gift, $12,-
226,250; cash, gifts and
grants, $11,418,279; pledge
balance on gifts to the Golden Anniversary Development Program, $609,453;
bequest expectancies, $4,-
525,500; and trusts executed, $859,312.
Private sources accounted
for $23,680,965 of the $29,-
638,794, while $5,957,829
was received in non-research
government grants.
Tips For Registration
1. Get a copy of the class
schedule as soon as you arrive on campus. (Available
at the Registration and
Scheduling Office, Room S-
124, Memorial Classroom
Building.)
2. Study the class schedule
and try to work out a \
Uratnary time schedule, using
dlffr
fore you go to the
for registration.
turself ol
U. a O., Scheduling Help-
Service (Students who are
specially trained to assist you
with scheduling problems).
They will be available from
4 to 7 p.m. in the lower
nge of the student Union
Sunday. Sep**